Rage (novel)

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Title Rage
First edition cover
First edition cover
Author Richard Bachman (Stephen King)
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Horror novel
Publisher Signet
Released 1977
Media type Print (Paperback & Hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-451-07645-1 (first edition, paperback)
For the film sequel to Carrie, see The Rage: Carrie 2.

Rage (originally titled Getting It On) is the first novel by Stephen King published under the pseudonym Richard Bachman. Though he began writing it in 1966, before his first published novel, Carrie (1974), it wasn't published until 1977.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The narrator, Charlie Decker, a high school senior, details how he had long been fighting his growing rage against the authority figures which populate his world. He finally snapped and hit one of his teachers with a heavy wrench he had taken to carrying in his pocket; after much wrangling and discussion, the incident was dropped and he was allowed to return to school. His mental problems only proceeded to get worse, and, as the actual story begins, during a meeting with the school principal, he snaps again when the principal's disrespectful attitude has Charlie being transferred to a different school. This time, he storms out of the meeting, goes to his locker and gets a gun he had previously taken from his father's desk. He sets the locker contents on fire, then proceeds to his classroom where he kills his math teacher Mrs. Underwood. The locker-fire sets off an alarm, and the school begins to be evacuated. Another teacher, Mr. Vance, comes into the classroom to tell the kids to leave, and Charlie shoots him as well. The school is evacuated even more quickly and the police and media arrive on the scene.

This begins a long afternoon's discussion with his hostages/fellow students. Among many other things, Charlie says that he honestly does not know why he has chosen to do these things and claims that if he did know, he probably wouldn't be doing them. While toying with the various authority figures who attempt to negotiate with him, he turns the class into a sort of therapy group, causing his schoolmates to semi-voluntarily tell embarrassing secrets about themselves and each other. Interspersed throughout are narrative flashbacks to Charlie's own unpleasant childhood and adolescence, particularly his horrid relationship with his father, an abusive alcoholic. Towards the end of the stand-off, Charlie is shot in the chest by a police marksman, but escapes death thanks to the locker padlock that he put in his breast pocket after starting the fire.

He finally comes to the realization that only one of the other students is really being held there by him and his gun: a seeming "big man on campus" named Ted Jones, who is harboring his own unpleasant secrets. The other students attack Jones, leaving him battered and catatonic, and file out of the school. When the police enter the classroom, the now-unarmed Charlie deliberately makes a wild "threatening" attack and is shot three times. He survives and is committed to an insane asylum; finished telling his tale to whomever he is telling it to as evident by the aftermath of his classmates' lives, he concludes by saying it is time to turn out the light.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Connections to actual school shootings

The novel's plot vaguely resembles the events of the Columbine High School massacre and other school massacres. After that event happened, the author allowed Rage to go out of print out of fear that it may inspire similar events, as it had already been associated with two previous high school shootings:

When King decided to let Rage fall out of print in the United States, it was part of a compilation of Richard Bachman books called The Bachman Books. The other novels that appeared in that compilation (The Long Walk, Road Work, and The Running Man) are now published as separate books in the USA. The Bachman Books is still in print in the United Kingdom and other countries.

In a discursive keynote address King delivered to the Vermont Library Conference, he explored the complex sociological and cultural issues surrounding this novel-and its apparent link to school shootings-which he placed within the broader context of America's fixation on violence.

He alluded to the case of Michael Carneal, a boy from Paducah, Kentucky whom media outlets claimed owned a copy of Rage, which was contained within his school locker.

"The Carneal incident was enough for me. I asked my publisher to take the damned thing out of print. They concurred." King went on to describe his complicated, nuanced view on this subject, which acknowledged the culpability that cultural or artistic products-such as "Rage"-play in influencing individuals-particularly, troubled youths-while also declaring that artists and writers can not be denied the aesthetic opportunity to draw upon their own culture-which is suffused with violence, according to King-in their work.

He went on to describe his inspiration for stories such as "Rage," which drew heavily upon his own frustrations and pains as a high school student.[2]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links